Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on August 19, 2008 - 1:44pm.
Ms. Rowland, are you suggesting that a typical case of yours involves a person falsely accused of a crime (or do you just believe everything your client tells you)? How many cases would be typical, 80% of your cases? Please, let us know unbiased you are and tell us what percentage of your clients are innocent. Now, I don't mean those clients that have an excuse in your eyes (like he was just hanging around his friend when they decided to carjack some one and he just went along for the ride or he couldn't get a job so he dealt drugs because there is too much hassle in getting public assistance).
Also, it's sad those Young Lawyers couldn't explain that the people accused of a crime were a danger to the public safety and a threat to skip court which is why they were in chains before trial. Why don't you visit the Medical Examiner's office and see how many people like your clients end up in the morgue from the violence in Baltimore.
Candor, please, Ms. Rowland
Ms. Rowland, are you suggesting that a typical case of yours involves a person falsely accused of a crime (or do you just believe everything your client tells you)? How many cases would be typical, 80% of your cases? Please, let us know unbiased you are and tell us what percentage of your clients are innocent. Now, I don't mean those clients that have an excuse in your eyes (like he was just hanging around his friend when they decided to carjack some one and he just went along for the ride or he couldn't get a job so he dealt drugs because there is too much hassle in getting public assistance).
Also, it's sad those Young Lawyers couldn't explain that the people accused of a crime were a danger to the public safety and a threat to skip court which is why they were in chains before trial. Why don't you visit the Medical Examiner's office and see how many people like your clients end up in the morgue from the violence in Baltimore.